Could I Leave You? and The Invasion (Doctor Who): Difference between pages

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{{Doctorwhobox|
{{trivia|date=October 2007}}{{about|a [[Desperate Housewives]] episode|the [[Stephen Sondheim]] song|Follies}}
|number=046
{{Infobox Television episode
|image=[[Image:The Invasion.jpg|250px]]
| Title = Could I Leave You?
|caption=The [[Second Doctor]] and Tobias Vaughn
| Series = [[Desperate Housewives]]
|serial_name= The Invasion
| Image = <!-- Deleted image removed: [[Image:CouldILeaveYou143.jpg|300px]] -->
|show=DW
| Caption = Bree meets her sponsor Peter.
|type=serial
| Season = 2
|doctor=[[Patrick Troughton]] ([[Second Doctor]])
| Episode = 17
| Airdate = [[March 26]], [[2006]]
|companion=[[Frazer Hines]] ([[Jamie McCrimmon]])
|companion2=[[Wendy Padbury]] ([[Zoe Heriot]])
| Production = 217
|guests=*[[Nicholas Courtney]] — [[Brigadier Lethbridge-Stewart]]
| Writer = [[Scott Sanford Tobis]]
*Edward Burnham — Professor Watkins
| Director = [[Pam Thomas]]
*[[Sally Faulkner]] — Isobel Watkins
| Guests =
*[[Kevin Stoney]] — [[List of Doctor Who villains#Tobias Vaughn|Tobias Vaughn]]
| Episode list = [[List of Desperate Housewives episodes]]
*[[Peter Halliday]] — Packer
| Prev = [[There Is No Other Way]]
*Geoffrey Cheshire — [[List of Doctor Who UNIT Personnel#Corporal Tracy|Tracy]]
| Next = [[Everybody Says Don't]]
*Ian Fairbairn — Gregory
}}
*Edward Dentith — [[List of Doctor Who UNIT Personnel#Major-General Rutlidge|Major General Rutlidge]]
*[[Clifford Earl]] — [[List of Doctor Who UNIT Personnel#Major Branwell|Major Branwell]]
*Robert Sidaway — [[List of Doctor Who UNIT Personnel#Captain Jimmy Turner|Captain Turner]]
*Norman Hartley — [[List of Doctor Who UNIT Personnel#Sergeant Peters|Sergeant Peters]]
*James Thornhill — [[List of Doctor Who UNIT Personnel#Sergeant Walters|Sergeant Walters]]
*[[John Levene]] — [[Sergeant Benton|Corporal Benton]]
*Stacy Davies — [[List of Doctor Who UNIT Personnel#Private Perkins|Private Perkins]]
*[[Sheila Dunn]] — Phone Operator
*Bernard G. High, Joseph O'Connell — Soldiers
*Murray Evans — Lorry Driver
*[[Walter Randall]] — Patrolman
*Peter Thompson — Workman
*Dominic Allan — Policeman
*Pat Gorman, Ralph Carrigan, Charles Finch, John Spradbury, Derek Chaffer, Terence Denville, Peter Thornton, Richard King — [[Cyberman|Cybermen]]
|writer=[[Derrick Sherwin]], from a story by [[Kit Pedler]]
|director=[[Douglas Camfield]]
|script_editor=[[Terrance Dicks]]
|producer=[[Peter Bryant]]
|executive_producer=None
|production_code=VV
|series=[[List of Doctor Who serials#Season 6 (1968-69)|Season 6]]
|length=8 episodes, 25 minutes each
|missing_eps=2 episodes (1 and 4)
|date=[[November 2]]&ndash;[[December 21]], [[1968]]
|preceding=''[[The Mind Robber]]''
|following=''[[The Krotons]]''
|}}
:{{Otheruses4|the Second Doctor serial|the Third Doctor serial, whose first episode was called Invasion|Invasion of the Dinosaurs}}
'''''The Invasion''''' is a [[list of Doctor Who serials|serial]] in the [[United Kingdom|British]] [[science fiction television]] series ''[[Doctor Who]]'', which was first broadcast in eight weekly parts from [[November 2]] to [[December 21]], [[1968]]. It is the first [[List of incomplete Doctor Who serials|now-incomplete Doctor Who serial]] to be released with full-length [[Animation|animated]] reconstructions of its [[Doctor Who missing episodes|missing episodes]].


==Plot==
"'''Could I Leave You?'''" is the 40th episode of the [[American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] [[television series]], ''[[Desperate Housewives]]''. The episode was the 17th episode for the show's second season. The episode was written by [[Scott Sanford Tobis]] and was directed by [[Pam Thomas]]. It originally aired on [[March 26]], [[2006]].
===Synopsis===
After the [[The Mind Robber|newly reformed]] [[TARDIS]] evades a missile fired at it from the dark side of the moon, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe arrive in late twentieth-century London. However the TARDIS's visual stabiliser has become damaged, rendering it invisible. In order to have it repaired, they set out to find [[Professor Travers]] (of ''[[The Abominable Snowmen]]'' and ''[[The Web of Fear]]'') and ask for his assistance. When they arrive, they find that he has left for [[United States of America|America]], leaving his home in the care of Isobel Watkins and her scientist uncle, Professor Watkins. She explains that her uncle has disappeared, after he worked on an invention for International Electromatics. The Doctor and Jamie go to IE's head office in London to investigate.


When the computerised receptionist won't let them past, they seek out another point of entry; this leads them to being gassed and taken to see IE's Managing Director, Tobias Vaughn. He apologises for the rough treatment the companions have endured, and explains that Professor Watkins was engrossed in a delicate stage of his work and agreed to remain on site—a statement which has [[wikt:pique#Verb (transitive)|piqued]] the Doctor's suspicions. After they leave, Vaughn reveals an alien machine, by opening a hidden panel in the wall, which tells him that the Doctor and Jamie have been recognised from Planet 14 (see [[#Notes|Notes]], below), and are a threat to their plans.
== Guest Starring ==
* [[Currie Graham]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Lynette's family|Ed Ferrara]]
* [[Jay Harrington]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Susan's family|Dr. Ron McCready]]
* [[Lee Tergesen]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Bree's family|Peter McMillan]]
* [[Ryan Carnes]] as [[Justin (Desperate Housewives)|Justin]]
* [[Nichole Hiltz]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Gabrielle's family|Libby Collins]]
* [[Kristin Bauer]] as Veronica
* [[Eddie McClintock]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Gabrielle's family|Frank Helm]]
* [[John Kapelos]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Gabrielle's family|Eugene Beale]]
* [[Bruce Jarchow]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Bree's family|Samuel "Sam" Bormanis]]
* [[Jennifer Lyons]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Gabrielle's family|Cecile]]


The Doctor and Jamie are [[Kidnapping|abducted]] by two men, [[Sergeant Benton|Benton]] and Tracy, and taken to a [[C-130 Hercules|military transport aircraft]], housing a complete operations room, where they are met by the Brigadier. He explains about UNIT, and the taskforce's investigation of IE.
===Co-Starring===
* [[Jennie Lee Vaughn Campbell]] as Deanna
* [[Reid Collums]] as Bartender
* [[William Stanford Davis]] as William
* [[Darryl Alan Reed]] as Security Guard
* [[Mitch Silpa]] as [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Lynette's family|Jerry]]
* [[Jake Zentner and Ryan Zentner]] as Donovan
* [[Chris Damiano]] as Delivery Guy


Concerned about their failure to return, Zoe and Isobel leave for IE in search for them. They also encounter the receptionist, and are similarly frustrated when Zoe's inquiries about the Doctor and Jamie are all but ignored. Instead of seeking another method of entry like Jamie and the Doctor, Zoe verbally inputs an unsolvable [[ALGOL]] equation that overloads and destroys the receptionist, which leads to their capture. Isobel is used to make her uncle, who is being held captive, co-operate.
==Plot==

The Doctor and Jamie return to Travers' house, to find a note from Zoe and Isobel, explaining their going to search for them. They return to IE, and find several packing cases being loaded onto a train—one of which has an item of Zoe's clothing showing. However, they are again captured by the security chief Packer (who captured them the first time around), and again taken to Vaughn, where the Doctor accuses him of kidnapping Zoe and Isobel (a claim he flatly denies). Vaughn invites the two companions to come to the company's country compound, where the train will be arriving; it is here where they meet Professor Watkins, who has been warned to not mention Zoe and Isobel's whereabouts. He shows the Doctor his cerebration mentor, a teaching device that is capable of inducing emotional changes.

The Doctor queries Vaughn of the deep space communicator he noticed when he came into the compound; in return, Vaughn demands that the Doctor explain about the failed visual stabiliser, even threatening to hand Zoe and Isobel over to Packer if he doesn't co-operate.

The Doctor and Jamie escape onto a railway siding. Whilst hiding in the crates, Jamie has a near encounter with an automated cocoon. They emerge from the crates, and overhear guards being ordered to take Zoe and Isobel to the tenth floor.

Vaughn confides in Packer that he intends to use the cerebration mentor to control the [[Cyberman|Cybermen]] once they have invaded Earth; he also intends to use the TARDIS as a "getaway car", should he fail.

Vaughn broadcasts over the intercom system to the Doctor that he has ten minutes to surrender or Zoe and Isobel will be harmed. The Doctor uses a radio transceiver (given to him by the Brigadier) to order in assistance from UNIT, who — with the use of a helicopter — assist in rescuing Zoe and Isobel from the room they are locked in. Realising how dangerous UNIT are to his plans, Vaughn exercises [[Hypnotism|hypnotic control]] over Major General Rutlidge, and orders him to cease UNIT's investigations.

The Doctor examines photographs of [[UFO]]s over the IE factory, and reasons that those ships are bringing cocoons to Earth. He, along with Jamie, sneak into the London IE warehouse, where they witness the emergence of a Cyberman from its cocoon. They go and warn the Brigadier that a Cyberman army are invading Earth, and that they are hidden somewhere on Earth. (the Doctor later states that they are hidden in the sewers.) However, Rutlidge has ordered the Brigadier to cease all investigations against IE. Lethbridge-Stewart intends to gain authority from Geneva, but requires proof to back his reasoning. Isobel offers her expertise as a photographer, but the Brigadier refuses.

Vaughn tests Watkins' device on an awakened Cyberman; however, the alien is driven mad by the machine, and escapes into the sewers. Vaughn reveals that in an hour's time, the Earth will come under the control of the Cybermen through a micro-electronic circuit built into every IE device; the Doctor discovers this same circuit when he opens up an IE radio, and sets about making a device to block the telepathic signal.

Meanwhile, Isobel, Zoe and Jamie have ventured into the sewers to obtain proof of the Cybermen's presence on Earth, narrowly escaping them in the process. The photos, however, prove to be worthless as they look too much like [[Forgery|fakes]].

Watkins perfects his machine and delivers it to Vaughn, but discovers that the Managing Director has been partially [[Cyberman#Physical characteristics|cybernised]]. UNIT manage to free Watkins from IE, during which time the Doctor creates a ''neurister'', which neutralises the Cybermens' hypnotic signals. The Brigadier orders all the troops to have one of these taped to the back of each one's neck. At dawn, the signal is broadcast, causing the collapse of the human race; leaving the Cybermen able to take over London.

UNIT plan to use a Russian rocket to destroy the source of Vaughn's signal, while using [[United Kingdom|UK]] missiles to destroy the incoming Cyberfleet. Captain Turner is sent to Russia to organise the rocket, while the Brigadier goes to the [[RAF Henlow|Henlow Downs]] missile site. The Doctor stays back to try and dissuade Vaughn one last time. The missiles are successfully launched, with help from Zoe, and the Cybermen blame Vaughn for the setback in their plans, announcing that they will use a megatron bomb to destroy life on Earth. Furious, he uses the cerebration mentor to destroy the machine in his office.

The Doctor persuades Vaughn to now aid humanity instead of try to defeat it, and they take a helicopter to the factory, where they used Walkins' machine to battle the massed army of Cybermen; UNIT forces arrive later to assist. Vaughn is killed in the skirmish, but the homing signal is successfully shut down. The megatron bomb is destroyed by a missile, while the rocket destroys the last Cyberman ship, consequently stopping the hypnotic signal.

With the crisis now over, and the visual stabiliser circuits now repaired, the Doctor, Zoe and Jamie leave in the TARDIS.

===Continuity===
Though this story follows on immediately from ''[[The Mind Robber]]'' with a reprise of the fragmented TARDIS reforming in space, no mention is made of the previous adventure and the Master of the Land of Fiction is mysteriously no longer present.

It is later claimed in ''[[Spearhead from Space]]'' that the events in ''The Invasion'' were kept from the public. How this was possible when the entire population of Earth all collapsed at the same time is never explained. In ''[[Remembrance of the Daleks]]'', the Doctor suggests that humans have an "amazing capacity for self-deception". Similar attitudes have been expressed to later Earth invasions, both in the "classic" and "new" series -- including a [[Army of Ghosts|much later Cyberman invasion]].

Corporal (later Sergeant) [[Sergeant Benton|Benton]] of UNIT is introduced in this serial. John Levene, who had previously played a [[Cyberman]] in ''[[The Moonbase]]'' and a [[Yeti (Doctor Who)|Yeti]] in ''[[The Web of Fear]]'', would reprise the role of Benton fifteen more times in the series, as well as in the [[Doctor Who spin-offs#Video|spin-off video]] ''[[Wartime (Doctor Who)|Wartime]]'', produced by [[Reeltime Pictures]] in 1987.

The character of Tobias Vaughn reappears in the [[Virgin New Adventures]] spin off novel ''[[Original Sin (Doctor Who)|Original Sin]]'' by [[Andy Lane]] from 1995, meeting the [[Seventh Doctor]]. In the book, Vaughn is the Chairman of a powerful company, Interstellar Nanotomic which is an anagram of "International Electromatics". He says instead of dying in Part eight, his consciousness was transmitted via a satellite into one of fourteen identical robot copies of himself that he uses to influence the people of Earth from behind the scenes. The canonicity of this book to the series is open to interpretation.

Much later, the [[Tenth Doctor]] encounters a similar situation (a powerful electronics company dominating the planet in league with Cybermen) on a parallel Earth in the two-part story ''[[Rise of the Cybermen]]'' and ''[[The Age of Steel]]''. Also, in the first episode of this 2-parter, the vans used to collect homeless people for conversion were hired out by a company called Industrial Electromatics.

====Planet 14====
The Cybermen mention having encountered the Doctor previously on "Planet 14". Since from the Cybermen's perspective this story takes place before ''[[The Tomb of the Cybermen]]'', it initially appears unlikely that Planet 14 is [[Telos (Doctor Who)|Telos]], possibly suggesting an untelevised adventure. However, given the Cybermen's more technologically advanced appearance and the fact that they later gain access to time-travel (''[[Attack of the Cybermen]]'') and use it to travel to 1985, it is more likely that they are the one and the same group and this is their first attempt at altering history (a cyber-ship does survive the end of The Invasion).

In the [[Grant Morrison]] scripted ''[[Doctor Who Magazine]]'' comic strip story ''The World Shapers'' (DWM #127-#129), it was revealed that the Doctor in question was the [[Sixth Doctor]], and that Planet 14 was [[List of Doctor Who planets#M|Marinus]]. That story, taking place prior to ''[[The Tenth Planet]]'' in Cyber-history, also stated that the Voord evolved into the Cybermen and that Marinus eventually became Mondas, the Cyberman homeworld. As with all ''Doctor Who'' tie-in media, the [[Whoniverse#Inclusion and canonicity|canonicity]] of the comic strips is open to interpretation.

====UNIT dating====
Dialog places ''The Invasion'' four years after ''[[The Web of Fear]]'', which further dialog places forty years after ''[[The Abominable Snowmen]]'' (which still further dialog places in 1935). Taking all this conversation at face value would place The Invasion in 1979. Indeed, the story was intended to have a "near future" setting, to serve as a backdrop for the [[Third Doctor]]'s pending UNIT era. Nevertheless, dating has never been consistently applied. (See [[UNIT dating controversy]].)

In the "new series" era, the production team suggests that UNIT stories generally occurred in the year they were broadcast. The 2007 episode ''[[The Sound of Drums]]'' refers to UNIT having established procedures for alien contact in 1968 — apparently a reference to the events of ''The Invasion''. References elsewhere, such as in the ''[[Sarah Jane Adventures]]'' story ''[[Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?]]'', support this chronology. The debate continues, however.

==Production==
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeHead|name=[[The Invasion (Doctor Who)|The Invasion]]
|Archive=Y
|
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 1|2 November 1968|24:32|7.3|Archive=y|Fragment=y}}<!--46-->
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 2|9 November 1968|24:26|7.1|16mm t/r|Archive=y}}<!--46-->
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 3|16 November 1968|23:44|7.1|16mm t/r|Archive=y}}<!--46-->
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 4|23 November 1968|24:18|6.4|Archive=y|Fragment=y}}<!--46-->
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 5|30 November 1968|23:25|6.7|16mm t/r|Archive=y}}<!--46-->
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 6|7 December 1968|23:20|6.5|16mm t/r|Archive=y}}<!--46-->
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 7|14 December 1968|24:46|7.2|16mm t/r|Archive=y}}<!--46-->
{{DoctorWhoEpisodeBody|Episode 8|21 December 1968|25:03|7.0|16mm t/r|Archive=y}}<!--46-->
|
<ref>
{{cite web
|url= http://gallifreyone.com/episode.php?id=vv
|title= The Invasion
|publisher = Outpost Gallifrey
|author = Shaun Lyon et al
|date = 2007-03-31
|accessdate = 2008-08-30
}}
</ref><ref>
{{cite web
|url= http://www.drwhoguide.com/who_2v.htm
|title= The Invasion
|publisher = Doctor Who Reference Guide
|author =
|date =
|accessdate = 2008-08-30
}}
</ref><ref>
{{cite web
|url= http://www.shannonsullivan.com/drwho/serials/vv.html
|title= The Invasion
|publisher = A Brief History of Time Travel
|last = Sullivan
|first = Shannon
|date = 2007-08-07
|accessdate = 2008-08-30
}}
</ref>
}}
*Originally The Invasion was going to be a six part story called ''Return of the Cybermen''.
*The character of Professor Travers (who appeared in the two earlier Yeti stories) was to have appeared for a third time, but the decision was made to replace him with Professor Watkins, although Travers is still referenced by name several times. <ref name="The Invasion DVD">{{cite video
| people =
| title = [[Doctor Who DVD releases#Releases|Doctor Who - The Invasion]]
| medium = [[DVD]]
| publisher = 2 Entertain Video
| date = [[2006]] }}</ref>
*The sequence where Gregory describes UNIT's attack on an IE car and then is subsequently killed by a Cyberman was written into the script after time pressures prevented the production team from filming the car attack on location. (Ian Marter, however, did reinstate the lost car attack scene in his novelisation.)


===Casting===
After [[Susan Mayer|Susan]] is discharged from the hospital, [[List of Desperate Housewives characters#Susan's family|Dr. Ron]] arrives in her hospital room to bring her home and to ask her a few questions. Ron asks if she happens to know anyone named Mike, because while under surgery Susan professed her love for [[Mike Delfino|Mike]], much to Ron's chagrin. Susan lies and assures Ron that he is mistaken and that she is not seeing anyone. He then asks if she is married to [[Karl Mayer]] because of Nurse Hisel's run-in with him. Susan tells Ron that the relationship is platonic and that Susan only re-married Karl because he has an excellent insurance plan. Ron feels hurt that Susan could not afford medical care but is still upset that she did not tell him. Later, Susan invites Dr. Ron and Karl over for dinner where they actually have a good time in each other's company. The plot thickens when Karl purposely breaks a pipe which proceeds to leak. Karl then asks Ron to go across the street and alert the plumber, whom he refers to only as "Delfino". Ron then hurries across the street and explains the situation to Mike. As he gathers his tools, Mike tells Ron to call him by his first name. Immediately, Ron runs out of the house where Susan is already on the street chasing after. Susan then falls out of her wheelchair making it look as if Ron pushed her. Mike sees this and threatens him never to hurt her. While Mike walks away, Dr. Ron shoves him but the fight is soon broken up. Susan is then left on the street alone. Soon after, Mike tries to patch things up but only makes matters worse since Susan is still angered because of their break-up. She soon regrets her words when Dr. Ron breaks up with her via telephone.
*Peter Halliday, who plays Packer, also supplied the voice of the Cyber-Director in the first seven episodes of the serial. In addition, Halliday went on to do several other roles (both voice and acting) in several later serials in the series.
*Edward Burnham also portrays Professor Kettlewell in the Tom Baker serial, "Robot."


===Filming===
[[Gabrielle Solis|Gabrielle]] is puzzled when their adoption lawyer continues to present them with "ugly" mothers. Gabrielle tries to convince the lawyer and [[Carlos Solis|Carlos]] that she wants a "pretty baby" meaning that the mother should be at Gabrielle's standards. The Solises find no luck until the lawyer introduces them to Libby, a pole dancer. Libby satisfies Gabrielle's standard for beauty, and it appears that Libby will consent to the adoption. However, after Libby finds out that the Solises are Mexican, she refuses to give them the baby since she feels they may be "underprivileged". Gabrielle scoffs at this and offers Libby a gift to guarantee the baby. Libby agrees which makes Gabrielle extremely satisfied. Little does Gabrielle know that Libby knows the identity of the father and that she is planning to use the Solises to get what she wants.
*Wendy Padbury does not appear in episode three, as she was on holiday.
*Frazer Hines was on holiday during the last episode, yet appeared in a pre-recorded film insert at the conclusion.
*According to Frazer Hines in an interview on the audio CD of ''The Invasion'', Sally Faulkner's skirt kept getting blown up around her neck whilst climbing up the rope ladder to the helicopter. To avoid the same thing happening to his kilt, he remembered reading somewhere that [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|The Queen]] had lead weights sewn into the hem of her skirt to stop this from happening to her. It so happened that Frazer's dresser was a keen fisherman, and so got him to sew some lead weights into his kilt.


===Post-production===
[[Bree Van De Kamp|Bree]] begins attending [[Alcoholics Anonymous]] meetings and befriends her sponsor, Peter. Bree manages to lie to Peter stating that she has been sober for a while and that she is only there to please her son who is convinced she has a problem. Peter tries to delve deeper but Bree is very modest with him. Later at a department store, Bree purchases a few clothing items and proceeds to have a drink at the bar. She then spots Justin and Andrew from a distance at the check out corner. Bree asks why Andrew is there since he is supposed to be grounded. Andrew tells her to be quiet since he will lie under oath and say that Bree molested him while under the influence. Bree becomes very angered at this and is forced to surrender her credit card. Later, she becomes extremely drunk and passes out in a dressing room. Hours later, Bree discovers that she is locked in the store alone. After getting dressed, Bree becomes stuck in the security fence and is forced to call her sponsor, Peter. Peter manages to help her out and drives her home.
*Due to director [[Douglas Camfield]]'s refusal to use regular composer [[Dudley Simpson]], [[Don Harper]] was hired to do the music for this serial. It would be Harper's only work with ''[[Doctor Who]]''.
*This was Kit Pedler's last on-screen credit for ''Doctor Who'' for almost thirty-eight years, until "[[Rise of the Cybermen]]" in 2006, twenty-five years after his passing.
* In the animated version of episode 1, the cartoonist drew in '[[Story arcs in Doctor Who#Bad Wolf|Bad Wolf]]' (the story arc of the [[List of Doctor Who serials#Series 1 (2005)|2005 series]]) on Isobel's wall where she writes phone numbers. This was not in the original episode, of course.


{{Doctorwhobook|
[[Lynette Scavo|Lynette]] and Ed hire a new partner to the advertising firm, Veronica, who is a young mother. When she asks Lynette if she will be able to [[breastfeeding|breastfeed]] her son Donovan, Lynette tells her it should not be a problem. However, when the other partners learn that Veronica's child is 5 years old, they find it a little abnormal that she is still breastfeeding. Ed then forces Lynette to confront her and ask her to close the drapes but also to wean him off. Veronica defends herself saying that she cannot lose any weight through exercise and that breastfeeding is the only way she is staying thin. Later Lynette spots Veronica's son and asks him if he would like a chocolate milk. She then takes a quart from the refrigerator and gives it to him. Immediately, Donovan takes a liking to the milk and does not want his mother's milk anymore. This causes Veronica to become upset since without nursing she will become fat again. Lynette tries her best to comfort her but is satisfied that her scheme was a success.
|title=The Invasion
|series=[[List of Doctor Who novelisations|Target novelisations]]
|number=98
|featuring=
|cover=Doctor Who The Invasion.jpg
|writer=[[Ian Marter]]
|publisher=[[Target Books]]
|coverartist=[[Andrew Skilleter]]
|isbn=0 426 20169 8
|set_between=
|pages=
|date=10 October 1985
|preceding=[[The Myth Makers#In print|The Myth Makers]]
|following=[[The Krotons#In print|The Krotons]]
|}}
==Commercial releases==
[[Image:Anim doczoe.jpg|left|thumb|A scene from the animated reconstruction of the missing first episode which was included on the 2006 DVD release of the serial.]]
As with many serials from the Troughton era, a complete version of ''The Invasion'' does not exist in the BBC's archives, with Episodes 1 and 4 having been lost (although their soundtracks survive, recorded off-air by fans at home). The story was released on BBC Video in 1993, with the missing Episodes One and Four summarised on-screen by Nicholas Courtney. This was the first incomplete story to be released on BBC Video.


The soundtracks for ''The Invasion'' and ''[[The Tenth Planet]]'' along with a bonus disc, ''The Origins of the Cybermen'', an audio essay by [[David Banks]], were released in a collector's tin called ''Doctor Who: Cybermen''.
Meanwhile on Wisteria Lane, Matthew Applewhite wants to buy Danielle a present for her birthday but cannot because he does not have a job. [[Betty Applewhite|Betty]] offers him money but Matthew is set on getting a job and moving on with his life. He then tells his mother that they should put Caleb away since they will not have to hide anymore and he will be safer. Betty scoffs at this and offers Matthew twenty dollars. When Danielle arrives home, she finds Caleb hiding in her bedroom and he offers her a gift. Danielle tells him to go home, but when Caleb refuses, she shoos him out calling him a freak. Caleb, angered and hurt, runs out of the house.


==Notes==
===DVD===
In June 2006, the BBC announced that the animation studio [[Cosgrove Hall]], who previously created the webcast ''[[Scream of the Shalka]]'', had produced full-length animated versions of the two missing episodes. These episodes, along with newly remastered copies of the rest of the serial, were released on DVD on [[6 November]], [[2006]].<ref>{{cite_web| url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/news/cult/news/drwho/2006/06/20/33077.shtml| title=Doctor Who ReAnimated!| publisher=BBC.com| date=2006-06-20| accessdate=2007-12-05}}</ref>
*Although credited, Edie Britt ([[Nicollette Sheridan]]), Paul Young ([[Mark Moses]]), Tom Scavo ([[Doug Savant]]), and Zach Young ([[Cody Kasch]]) do not appear in this episode.


The DVD release included the documentary ''Evolution of the Invasion'' produced by [[John Kelly (Doctor Who)|John Kelly]] and featuring interviews with a number of the cast and crew.
==Title reference==
*The episode title is that of the song "Could I Leave You?", which is sung by Phyllis Rogers Stone in the [[Stephen Sondheim]] musical ''[[Follies]]''.


==International Titles==
===In print===
A novelisation of this serial, written by [[Ian Marter]] (who played [[Harry Sullivan]] during the [[Fourth Doctor]] era), was published by [[Target Books]] in May 1985.
*French: ''Des liens rompus'' (Broken Bonds)
*German: ''Trennungen'' (Separations)
*Italian: ''Potrei Mai Lasciarti?'' (Could I Leave you?)
*Hungarian: ''Elválások'' (Separations)
*Polish: ''Separacje'' (Separations)


==References==
{{Reflist}}
==External links==
*{{BBCCDW|id=invasion|title=The Invasion}}
*{{Brief |id=vv | title=The Invasion}}
*{{Doctor Who RG | id=who_2v | title=The Invasion}}
*[http://www.bbc.co.uk/doctorwho/news/cult/news/drwho/2006/06/20/33077.shtml Doctor Who ReAnimated!] - news article on the DVD release with a link to a teaser clip of the animation.
*[http://www.doctorwholocations.net/stories/invasion Doctor Who Locations] - The Invasion
===Reviews===
*{{OG review | id=vv | title=The Invasion}}
*{{DWRG | id=invasion | title=The Invasion}}
===Target novelisation===
*{{OG review | id=vv-book | title=The Invasion (novelisation)}}
*{{DWRG | id=invasionnov | title=The Invasion (novelisation)}}
*[http://www.personal.leeds.ac.uk/~ecl6nb/OnTarget/1985/invasion/85invasi.htm On Target — ''The Invasion'']


{{Doctor Who (season 6)}}
{{DHSeason2}}
{{Cybermen Stories}}
{{UNIT Stories}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Invasion, The}}
[[Category:Desperate Housewives episodes]]
[[Category:Second Doctor serials]]
[[Category:Doctor Who missing episodes]]
[[Category:Cybermen television stories]]
[[Category:1968 television episodes]]


[[hu:Elválások]]
[[vo:Tutatak]]
[[pt:Could I Leave You?]]

Revision as of 09:33, 13 October 2008

046 – The Invasion
Doctor Who serial
File:The Invasion.jpg
The Second Doctor and Tobias Vaughn
Cast
Others
Production
Directed byDouglas Camfield
Written byDerrick Sherwin, from a story by Kit Pedler
Script editorTerrance Dicks
Produced byPeter Bryant
Executive producer(s)None
Production codeVV
SeriesSeason 6
Running time8 episodes, 25 minutes each
Episode(s) missing2 episodes (1 and 4)
First broadcastNovember 2December 21, 1968
Chronology
← Preceded by
The Mind Robber
Followed by →
The Krotons
List of Doctor Who episodes (1963–1989)

The Invasion is a serial in the British science fiction television series Doctor Who, which was first broadcast in eight weekly parts from November 2 to December 21, 1968. It is the first now-incomplete Doctor Who serial to be released with full-length animated reconstructions of its missing episodes.

Plot

Synopsis

After the newly reformed TARDIS evades a missile fired at it from the dark side of the moon, the Doctor, Jamie and Zoe arrive in late twentieth-century London. However the TARDIS's visual stabiliser has become damaged, rendering it invisible. In order to have it repaired, they set out to find Professor Travers (of The Abominable Snowmen and The Web of Fear) and ask for his assistance. When they arrive, they find that he has left for America, leaving his home in the care of Isobel Watkins and her scientist uncle, Professor Watkins. She explains that her uncle has disappeared, after he worked on an invention for International Electromatics. The Doctor and Jamie go to IE's head office in London to investigate.

When the computerised receptionist won't let them past, they seek out another point of entry; this leads them to being gassed and taken to see IE's Managing Director, Tobias Vaughn. He apologises for the rough treatment the companions have endured, and explains that Professor Watkins was engrossed in a delicate stage of his work and agreed to remain on site—a statement which has piqued the Doctor's suspicions. After they leave, Vaughn reveals an alien machine, by opening a hidden panel in the wall, which tells him that the Doctor and Jamie have been recognised from Planet 14 (see Notes, below), and are a threat to their plans.

The Doctor and Jamie are abducted by two men, Benton and Tracy, and taken to a military transport aircraft, housing a complete operations room, where they are met by the Brigadier. He explains about UNIT, and the taskforce's investigation of IE.

Concerned about their failure to return, Zoe and Isobel leave for IE in search for them. They also encounter the receptionist, and are similarly frustrated when Zoe's inquiries about the Doctor and Jamie are all but ignored. Instead of seeking another method of entry like Jamie and the Doctor, Zoe verbally inputs an unsolvable ALGOL equation that overloads and destroys the receptionist, which leads to their capture. Isobel is used to make her uncle, who is being held captive, co-operate.

The Doctor and Jamie return to Travers' house, to find a note from Zoe and Isobel, explaining their going to search for them. They return to IE, and find several packing cases being loaded onto a train—one of which has an item of Zoe's clothing showing. However, they are again captured by the security chief Packer (who captured them the first time around), and again taken to Vaughn, where the Doctor accuses him of kidnapping Zoe and Isobel (a claim he flatly denies). Vaughn invites the two companions to come to the company's country compound, where the train will be arriving; it is here where they meet Professor Watkins, who has been warned to not mention Zoe and Isobel's whereabouts. He shows the Doctor his cerebration mentor, a teaching device that is capable of inducing emotional changes.

The Doctor queries Vaughn of the deep space communicator he noticed when he came into the compound; in return, Vaughn demands that the Doctor explain about the failed visual stabiliser, even threatening to hand Zoe and Isobel over to Packer if he doesn't co-operate.

The Doctor and Jamie escape onto a railway siding. Whilst hiding in the crates, Jamie has a near encounter with an automated cocoon. They emerge from the crates, and overhear guards being ordered to take Zoe and Isobel to the tenth floor.

Vaughn confides in Packer that he intends to use the cerebration mentor to control the Cybermen once they have invaded Earth; he also intends to use the TARDIS as a "getaway car", should he fail.

Vaughn broadcasts over the intercom system to the Doctor that he has ten minutes to surrender or Zoe and Isobel will be harmed. The Doctor uses a radio transceiver (given to him by the Brigadier) to order in assistance from UNIT, who — with the use of a helicopter — assist in rescuing Zoe and Isobel from the room they are locked in. Realising how dangerous UNIT are to his plans, Vaughn exercises hypnotic control over Major General Rutlidge, and orders him to cease UNIT's investigations.

The Doctor examines photographs of UFOs over the IE factory, and reasons that those ships are bringing cocoons to Earth. He, along with Jamie, sneak into the London IE warehouse, where they witness the emergence of a Cyberman from its cocoon. They go and warn the Brigadier that a Cyberman army are invading Earth, and that they are hidden somewhere on Earth. (the Doctor later states that they are hidden in the sewers.) However, Rutlidge has ordered the Brigadier to cease all investigations against IE. Lethbridge-Stewart intends to gain authority from Geneva, but requires proof to back his reasoning. Isobel offers her expertise as a photographer, but the Brigadier refuses.

Vaughn tests Watkins' device on an awakened Cyberman; however, the alien is driven mad by the machine, and escapes into the sewers. Vaughn reveals that in an hour's time, the Earth will come under the control of the Cybermen through a micro-electronic circuit built into every IE device; the Doctor discovers this same circuit when he opens up an IE radio, and sets about making a device to block the telepathic signal.

Meanwhile, Isobel, Zoe and Jamie have ventured into the sewers to obtain proof of the Cybermen's presence on Earth, narrowly escaping them in the process. The photos, however, prove to be worthless as they look too much like fakes.

Watkins perfects his machine and delivers it to Vaughn, but discovers that the Managing Director has been partially cybernised. UNIT manage to free Watkins from IE, during which time the Doctor creates a neurister, which neutralises the Cybermens' hypnotic signals. The Brigadier orders all the troops to have one of these taped to the back of each one's neck. At dawn, the signal is broadcast, causing the collapse of the human race; leaving the Cybermen able to take over London.

UNIT plan to use a Russian rocket to destroy the source of Vaughn's signal, while using UK missiles to destroy the incoming Cyberfleet. Captain Turner is sent to Russia to organise the rocket, while the Brigadier goes to the Henlow Downs missile site. The Doctor stays back to try and dissuade Vaughn one last time. The missiles are successfully launched, with help from Zoe, and the Cybermen blame Vaughn for the setback in their plans, announcing that they will use a megatron bomb to destroy life on Earth. Furious, he uses the cerebration mentor to destroy the machine in his office.

The Doctor persuades Vaughn to now aid humanity instead of try to defeat it, and they take a helicopter to the factory, where they used Walkins' machine to battle the massed army of Cybermen; UNIT forces arrive later to assist. Vaughn is killed in the skirmish, but the homing signal is successfully shut down. The megatron bomb is destroyed by a missile, while the rocket destroys the last Cyberman ship, consequently stopping the hypnotic signal.

With the crisis now over, and the visual stabiliser circuits now repaired, the Doctor, Zoe and Jamie leave in the TARDIS.

Continuity

Though this story follows on immediately from The Mind Robber with a reprise of the fragmented TARDIS reforming in space, no mention is made of the previous adventure and the Master of the Land of Fiction is mysteriously no longer present.

It is later claimed in Spearhead from Space that the events in The Invasion were kept from the public. How this was possible when the entire population of Earth all collapsed at the same time is never explained. In Remembrance of the Daleks, the Doctor suggests that humans have an "amazing capacity for self-deception". Similar attitudes have been expressed to later Earth invasions, both in the "classic" and "new" series -- including a much later Cyberman invasion.

Corporal (later Sergeant) Benton of UNIT is introduced in this serial. John Levene, who had previously played a Cyberman in The Moonbase and a Yeti in The Web of Fear, would reprise the role of Benton fifteen more times in the series, as well as in the spin-off video Wartime, produced by Reeltime Pictures in 1987.

The character of Tobias Vaughn reappears in the Virgin New Adventures spin off novel Original Sin by Andy Lane from 1995, meeting the Seventh Doctor. In the book, Vaughn is the Chairman of a powerful company, Interstellar Nanotomic which is an anagram of "International Electromatics". He says instead of dying in Part eight, his consciousness was transmitted via a satellite into one of fourteen identical robot copies of himself that he uses to influence the people of Earth from behind the scenes. The canonicity of this book to the series is open to interpretation.

Much later, the Tenth Doctor encounters a similar situation (a powerful electronics company dominating the planet in league with Cybermen) on a parallel Earth in the two-part story Rise of the Cybermen and The Age of Steel. Also, in the first episode of this 2-parter, the vans used to collect homeless people for conversion were hired out by a company called Industrial Electromatics.

Planet 14

The Cybermen mention having encountered the Doctor previously on "Planet 14". Since from the Cybermen's perspective this story takes place before The Tomb of the Cybermen, it initially appears unlikely that Planet 14 is Telos, possibly suggesting an untelevised adventure. However, given the Cybermen's more technologically advanced appearance and the fact that they later gain access to time-travel (Attack of the Cybermen) and use it to travel to 1985, it is more likely that they are the one and the same group and this is their first attempt at altering history (a cyber-ship does survive the end of The Invasion).

In the Grant Morrison scripted Doctor Who Magazine comic strip story The World Shapers (DWM #127-#129), it was revealed that the Doctor in question was the Sixth Doctor, and that Planet 14 was Marinus. That story, taking place prior to The Tenth Planet in Cyber-history, also stated that the Voord evolved into the Cybermen and that Marinus eventually became Mondas, the Cyberman homeworld. As with all Doctor Who tie-in media, the canonicity of the comic strips is open to interpretation.

UNIT dating

Dialog places The Invasion four years after The Web of Fear, which further dialog places forty years after The Abominable Snowmen (which still further dialog places in 1935). Taking all this conversation at face value would place The Invasion in 1979. Indeed, the story was intended to have a "near future" setting, to serve as a backdrop for the Third Doctor's pending UNIT era. Nevertheless, dating has never been consistently applied. (See UNIT dating controversy.)

In the "new series" era, the production team suggests that UNIT stories generally occurred in the year they were broadcast. The 2007 episode The Sound of Drums refers to UNIT having established procedures for alien contact in 1968 — apparently a reference to the events of The Invasion. References elsewhere, such as in the Sarah Jane Adventures story Whatever Happened to Sarah Jane?, support this chronology. The debate continues, however.

Production

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  • Originally The Invasion was going to be a six part story called Return of the Cybermen.
  • The character of Professor Travers (who appeared in the two earlier Yeti stories) was to have appeared for a third time, but the decision was made to replace him with Professor Watkins, although Travers is still referenced by name several times. [1]
  • The sequence where Gregory describes UNIT's attack on an IE car and then is subsequently killed by a Cyberman was written into the script after time pressures prevented the production team from filming the car attack on location. (Ian Marter, however, did reinstate the lost car attack scene in his novelisation.)

Casting

  • Peter Halliday, who plays Packer, also supplied the voice of the Cyber-Director in the first seven episodes of the serial. In addition, Halliday went on to do several other roles (both voice and acting) in several later serials in the series.
  • Edward Burnham also portrays Professor Kettlewell in the Tom Baker serial, "Robot."

Filming

  • Wendy Padbury does not appear in episode three, as she was on holiday.
  • Frazer Hines was on holiday during the last episode, yet appeared in a pre-recorded film insert at the conclusion.
  • According to Frazer Hines in an interview on the audio CD of The Invasion, Sally Faulkner's skirt kept getting blown up around her neck whilst climbing up the rope ladder to the helicopter. To avoid the same thing happening to his kilt, he remembered reading somewhere that The Queen had lead weights sewn into the hem of her skirt to stop this from happening to her. It so happened that Frazer's dresser was a keen fisherman, and so got him to sew some lead weights into his kilt.

Post-production

  • Due to director Douglas Camfield's refusal to use regular composer Dudley Simpson, Don Harper was hired to do the music for this serial. It would be Harper's only work with Doctor Who.
  • This was Kit Pedler's last on-screen credit for Doctor Who for almost thirty-eight years, until "Rise of the Cybermen" in 2006, twenty-five years after his passing.
  • In the animated version of episode 1, the cartoonist drew in 'Bad Wolf' (the story arc of the 2005 series) on Isobel's wall where she writes phone numbers. This was not in the original episode, of course.

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Commercial releases

File:Anim doczoe.jpg
A scene from the animated reconstruction of the missing first episode which was included on the 2006 DVD release of the serial.

As with many serials from the Troughton era, a complete version of The Invasion does not exist in the BBC's archives, with Episodes 1 and 4 having been lost (although their soundtracks survive, recorded off-air by fans at home). The story was released on BBC Video in 1993, with the missing Episodes One and Four summarised on-screen by Nicholas Courtney. This was the first incomplete story to be released on BBC Video.

The soundtracks for The Invasion and The Tenth Planet along with a bonus disc, The Origins of the Cybermen, an audio essay by David Banks, were released in a collector's tin called Doctor Who: Cybermen.

DVD

In June 2006, the BBC announced that the animation studio Cosgrove Hall, who previously created the webcast Scream of the Shalka, had produced full-length animated versions of the two missing episodes. These episodes, along with newly remastered copies of the rest of the serial, were released on DVD on 6 November, 2006.[2]

The DVD release included the documentary Evolution of the Invasion produced by John Kelly and featuring interviews with a number of the cast and crew.

In print

A novelisation of this serial, written by Ian Marter (who played Harry Sullivan during the Fourth Doctor era), was published by Target Books in May 1985.

References

  1. ^ Doctor Who - The Invasion (DVD). 2 Entertain Video. 2006. {{cite AV media}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  2. ^ "Doctor Who ReAnimated!". BBC.com. 2006-06-20. Retrieved 2007-12-05.

External links

Reviews

Target novelisation

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